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St. Possidius
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Bishop  of  Calama  in Numidia, author of a short  life of St. Augustine and of an   indiculus  or list  of St. Augustine's writings. The  dates  of his birth and death are unknown;  he was alive and in exile in 437 according to Prosper, who, in his  "Chronicle", records that Possidius and two other  bishops  were  persecuted  and expelled from their sees by  the  Vandal  king, Genseric, who was  an  Arian. Possidius (Vita S.  Augustini, xxxi), after describing the death of St. Augustine,  speaks of his unbroken friendship with him for forty years. He  also, speaking of himself in the third  person, lets it be known that he was one of  the  clergy  of St. Augustine's monastery  (ibid., xii). The date  of his promotion to  the episcopate was, according to  Tillemont, about 397. He followed St.  Augustine's example and established a  monastery  at  Calama. At a council, held at  Carthage, Possidius challenged Crispinus,  the  Donatist Bishop  of  Calama, to a public discussion which the  latter declined. Shortly afterwards one of Crispinus's  clergy, bearing the same name as his bishop, attempted to assassinate  Possidius. Legal proceedings were instituted against Crispinus, the bishop, who refused to punish his presbyter. He was proved to be a heretic  and was heavily fined, but  at the  intercession  of  Possidius the fine was not exacted ("Vita", xii; St. Augustine,  "Ep.", cv, 4; "Contra Crescon.", III, xlvi). In 407, Possidius  served, with St. Augustine and five other  bishops, on a committee appointed to  adjudicate upon some  ecclesiastical  matter, the particulars of which are not known. In 408  he nearly lost his life in a riot stirred up by the  pagans  at Callama (St. Augustine, "Epp.",  xc, xci, xciii). In 409 he was one of four  bishops  deputed to go to  Italy  to obtain the protection of the  emperor against the  Donatists. He  was one of the seven  bishops  chosen  to represent the  Catholic  party at  the "Collatio" of 411. In 416 he assisted at the Council of Milevum, where  fifty-nine Numidian  bishops  addressed a synodal letter to  Innocent  I , asking him to take action against  Pelagianism. He joined with St. Augustine  and three other  bishops  in a  further letter to  Innocent  on the  same subject, and was at the conference between St. Augustine and  the  Donatist  Emeritus. When the Vandals  invaded  Africa, he fled to Hippo and was present at  the death of St. Augustine (430). His "Vita S. Augustini", composed  before the capture of Carthage (439), is included in all editions  of the works of St. Augustine, and also printed in  Hurter's  "Opusc. SS. Patr.". His  indiculus  will be found in the last volume of  Migne's  edition of the works of St.  Augustine and in the tenth volume of the  Benedictine  edition. 
 CEILLIER,   Hist. des auteurs ecclés.  , XII; TILLEMONT,  Mémoires  , XIII.
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